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After draining a shark tank as part of a major refurbishment, keepers at the Sea Life Centre aquarium in Blackpool, England, were astonished to find more than 12,000 shark teeth littering the tank’s gravel, according to the Daily Mail U.K. The teeth had been building up in the tank since the last time it was fully emptied 23 years ago.
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Sharks shed their teeth frequently, so it wasn’t surprising to find some teeth, but Sea Life Centre staff were still taken aback by the sheer number of teeth they ended up with.
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Said Blackpool Sea Life senior aquarist Scott Blacker, “We always found a few teeth whenever we dived in the tank, but we were all astounded by just how many were lurking in every handful of gravel. It's a delicate job sorting them out, because they tend to be the same colour as the gravel and easy to overlook.”
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Dr. Ivan Sansom, a senior lecturer at Birmingham University, said, “We have teeth from every shark species that lived in the tank, including lots of sand tiger teeth, a species that hasn't featured in the display for more than eight years. … The biggest number we have are from black-tipped reef sharks, but that's hardly surprising, since this species sheds a whole row of more than 40 teeth every month.”
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The shark teeth aren’t just interesting garbage. The massive cache of teeth will be used as part of scientific research into global warming, because the teeth contain clues about changing ocean temperatures.
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University of Birmingham scientists have discovered a technique for measuring the temperatures in which sharks live, and it’s based on oxygen atoms found in discarded teeth. With this new bonanza of shark teeth from Blackpool, they hope to perfect the technique and expand their research.
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Knowledge of changing ocean temperatures can give scientists insight into the rising and falling populations among marine species over time, as well as evolutionary changes from as far back as prehistory. “The ultimate aim is to better understand how cooling waters in prehistoric times drove evolutionary change while warming waters led to extinctions,” Dr. Sansom said. “Current evidence from the past suggests we are going to see mass extinctions as our own oceans warm up.”
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Next: Up-Close Pictures of Great White Sharks Without a Cage
Blackpool Sea Life Centre’s sharks are currently living in temporary facilities, but will return to their newly refurbished aquariums in March, where presumably they’ll start all over with covering the floor with a confetti of discarded teeth. “It's great to know that our sharks are helping some really pioneering research,” said Blacker.
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2 Comments
Where did you so-call reporters dig up this photo? If that's a photo of the teeth found in a 23 year old shark tank then I'm Barack Obama. All of the teeth shown are over 20 million years old and are fossilized. They look like they're from Morocco.
January 26 2013 at 10:35 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyThey are noted for their poor dental hygene.
January 25 2013 at 8:21 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply